Found some great music recently.
12"
Ring My Bell (1979)-Anita Ward VG condition
I'm Starting Again (1981)-Grace Kennedy- VG condition.I had completely forgot about this song till I played it and it still sounds great.
The Boss (1979)-Diana Ross.Excellent Condition.A must have classic
Jump (1979)-The Ring .VG+ condition.Another great forgotten tune
Let Me Take You Dancing(1979)-Bryan Adams.VG conditionI know somewhat uninspiring but I needed to have a copy

LPS

Love To Love You Baby(1975)-Donna Summer.Excellent condition.I needed to replace my old copy as it was pretty ratty .
Blue Eyed Soul (1975) -Biddhu Orchestra.VG condition.Great disco orchestral arrangements from this classic producer
KC & The Sunshine Band(1975)-KC & The Sunshine Band.VG condition.Simply classic disco tracks That's The Way I Like It and Get Down Tonight.
Party Girl (1979)-Patti Brooks.Features her classic Got Tu Go Disco.Plus one of my favourites My Heart Belongs To You.
C'est Chic(1978)-Chic.Classic Lp from the team of Edwards and Rogers.I found this AMG review of the album to be quite interesting as the author purports this Lp to possibly be the definative disco album.
Released in 1978, just as disco began to peak, C'est Chic and its pair of dancefloor anthems, "Le Freak" and "I Want Your Love," put Chic at the top of that dizzying peak. The right album at the right time, C'est Chic is essentially a rehash of Chic, the group's so-so self-titled debut from a year earlier. That first album also boasted a pair of floor-filling anthems, "Dance Dance Dance" and "Everybody Dance," and, like C'est Chic, it filled itself out with a mix of disco and ballads. So, essentially, C'est Chic does everything its predecessor did, except it does so masterfully: each side similarly gets its timeless floor-filler ("Le Freak," "I Want Your Love"), quiet storm come-down ("Savoir Faire," "At Last I Am Free"), feel-good album track ("Happy Man," "Sometimes You Win"), and moody album capper ("Chic Cheer," "[Funny] Bone"). Producers Bernard Edwards and Nile Rodgers were quite a savvy pair and knew that disco was as much a formula as anything. As evidenced here, they definitely had their fingers on the pulse of the moment, and used their perceptive touch to craft one of the few truly great disco albums. In fact, you could even argue that C'est Chic very well may be the definitive disco album. After all, countless artists scored dancefloor hits, but few could deliver an album this solid, and nearly as few could deliver one this epochal as well. C'est Chic embodies everything wonderful and excessive about disco at its pixilated peak. It's anything but subtle with its at-the-disco dancefloor mania and after-the-disco bedroom balladry, and Edwards and Rodgers are anything but whimsical with their disco-ballad-disco album sequencing and pseudo-jet-set Euro poshness. Chic would follow C'est Chic with "Good Times," the group's crowning achievement, but never again would Edwards and Rodgers assemble an album as perfectly calculated as C'est Chic. — Jason Birchmeier